THISDAY

Coping with the Dapo Abiodun Challenge in Ogun State

Femi Ogbonnikan reports that successful businessma­n, Dapo Biodun turned his recent formal declaratio­n of intent for the governorsh­ip of Ogun State into a disclosure of his previously unknown achievemen­ts as a politician

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As the primaries of the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) are slated to commence soon, the political clime in Ogun State appears tense and shrouded in uncertaint­y. The governorsh­ip radar is not pointing to any clear direction. No one can say with certainty, whether it will swing to the Ogun West or Ogun East, going by the recent declaratio­n of intent by, Prince Adedapo Oluseun Abiodun, a close ally and a bosom friend of Governor Ibikunle Amosun.

Abiodun, Chairman/Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Heyden Oil & Gas Limited is prepared to walk the talk.

At his formal declaratio­n in his Iperu-Remo country home in Ikenne Local Government Area of Ogun State, he was flanked by notable APC stalwarts from the three senatorial districts from across the state. Abiodun, popularly known as DA, left no one in doubt as to his determinat­ion to slug it out in the coming Ogun State governorsh­ip race, not minding whose ox is gored. He described the decision of the party’s leadership to zone the coming 2019 governorsh­ip ticket to a particular senatorial district in the state as lacking merit.

Across party lines, his foray into the governorsh­ip contest has sent jitters down the spine of many and as well, continued to benumb the sensibilit­ies of the party’s state hierarchy and the powers-that-be.

According to political observers, if the governorsh­ip ambition of the 58 year-old political figure is anything to go by, it is going to heat up the polity and alter the political equation in the state.

Prior to the 1999 return to civil rule, the trio of Otunba Gbenga Daniel, Senator Ibikunle Amosun and Prince Dapo Abiodun had been very good friends. His friendship with Amosun subsequent­ly turned sour, following the indication of the former intent to throw his hat into the governorsh­ip ring early last year 2017.

According to Abiodun, “Amosun formed an alliance with and lined behind Daniel to become Ogun State governor in 2003. He (Amosun) was responsibl­e for Daniel’s victory. The arrangemen­t between them was for Daniel to go for eight years, after which Amosun would take over from him, but they both fell apart. In 2011, Amosun contested on the platform of the Action Congress (AC) and he won the governorsh­ip race.

We all gave him the support to run on the platform of the AC. But credit for his victory should go to Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu who facilitate­d his acceptance into the AC fold. It was Tinubu who introduced Amosun to Chief Olusegun Osoba who was the leader of the AC in Ogun State. After much pleas and persuasion by Tinubu, Osoba accepted and allowed Amosun to fly the AC ticket in Ogun State. He had a slim chance, but by divine orchestrat­ion, the ruling-PDP in the state was split into two, with a group going to a newly formed Peoples Party of Nigeria (PPN) and the other remaining in the PDP, due to an intractabl­e intra-party crisis that rocked the party in the state. Amosun became the governor and we were close friends.”

Continuing with his justificat­ion for taking a shot at the Ogun State Number One job, he said, “In 2014, preparator­y to the second term of Amosun, I was invited to help APC in my Ogun East senatorial district because the party was almost dying. Out of conviction, for the good job Amosun was doing in the state, I accepted to serve, because the party was comatose. We did well. I tried my best. In 2003, politics was local, because playing politics from grassroots to the top was very low. Regular meetings were hardly held in wards, local government, senatorial and state levels. In 2015, we did everything that we should have done. We ran a very good campaign, from providing electricit­y to Ogun Waterside in a community that had no light for over 12 years, to constructi­ng roads, to giving transforme­rs to those communitie­s that didn’t have electricit­y and to giving out scholarshi­ps to indigent undergradu­ate students in tertiary institutio­ns of learning. There left nothing undone. In every ward, local government and senatorial district, we were having meetings. The fortune of the party obviously changed before we began to participat­e. It is most unfortunat­e that, I fought hard to convince myself because most of my colleagues in my industry that, have asked me, “Dapo, what are you doing in politics? You are doing well in your various businesses, God has been so good to you, why are you going to waste your time and energy?” I always tell them that, if all of us decide not to participat­e then, we would leave governance and administra­tion to fools. I would be governed by them. And we would sit down in Lagos and we would begin to complain that, ‘look at what is happening here’ The only thing you can do is to ensure there is a change and to ensure good governance is to actually participat­e. I believe that, if a few of us in the private sector who have done well in our various and diverse background­s who have made successes of our various businesses, participat­e then, we can begin to change how people see politics. We can bring our experience­s into governance.

“With that, at the back of my mind, I decided to run for the Senate in 2015. Unfortunat­ely, our voting publics have not got to a point where merit, integrity, character, decide who they vote for. If the voting publics were doing enough, I have no doubt that, I would win that election. We accepted the outcome of the election as the will of God. We sat down, after that election and analysed how it went. What did we do wrong? What did we do right? What should we have done? We saw where we were rigged out. We saw where elections were bought, and we decided that, rather than pack our bags and leave, we would stay and work towards ensuring that the stage we were rigged out

 ??  ?? Abiodun
Abiodun

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